News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Daylight Saving Time ends Sunday. Warm and dry across Alabama this weekend. Showers possible next…
SUMMARY: The weather report discusses cold temperatures affecting York compared to Birmingham, where a dense fog advisory is in effect. Low clouds are currently present, keeping temperatures in the 60s, but will brighten this afternoon, with Birmingham expected to reach 80 degrees. The weekend will be warm and breezy with no rain. Daylight Saving Time ends tonight, resulting in an earlier sunset. Attention is also drawn to potential tropical developments in the Caribbean, with a high likelihood of a tropical depression forming next week that could impact the Gulf. Updates will follow as the situation evolves.

Daylight Saving Time ends Sunday. Warm and dry across Alabama this weekend. Showers possible next week.
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News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Funding approved for Bayou La Batre City Dock project, looking for contractor
SUMMARY: Funding for a $20 million Bayou La Batre City Dock project has been approved, aiming to revitalize the area and attract more visitors. The update will replace old docks and gravel parking with new infrastructure, including 50 slip docks, a marina, a bait shop, and a utility service dock. The project is partially funded by the federal Restore Act. Mayor Henry Barnes hopes the facelift will encourage more people to visit the seafood capital of Alabama. The bidding process for a contractor begins next week, with construction expected to start in 2025.

The City Docks in Bayou La Batre are one step closer to getting a major facelift.
FULL STORY: https://trib.al/WZcUCIF
News from the South - Alabama News Feed
Alabama officials seek to dismiss lawsuit challenging state DEI ban
by Alander Rocha, Alabama Reflector
March 26, 2025
Alabama officials have filed motions seeking to dismiss a lawsuit challenging SB 129, a law that limits diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs in public universities and the teaching of so-called “divisive concepts.”
The Alabama Attorney General’s office and members of the University of Alabama (UA) Board of Trustees argue that the University of Alabama professors and University of Alabama Birmingham students suing to overturn the law lack standing and that their claims fail to establish any constitutional violations.
The plaintiffs, who also include the Alabama NAACP, allege that SB 129, sponsored by Sen. Will Barfoot, R-Pike Road, violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the First Amendment. Plaintiffs argue that the law discriminates against minority students and faculty by restricting funding for student groups and eliminating campus spaces designed to support minority students.
The attorney general’s office claims plaintiffs “fail to show how each and every provision of the Act harms them,” arguing that plaintiffs “fail to include sufficient allegations to ‘nudge their claim across the line from conceivable to plausible.’”
The Board of Trustees stated in a separate motion that the law does not prevent discussions on race but prohibits faculty from requiring students to adopt specific perspectives.
“As it relates to the classroom, SB 129 states that professors may not ‘direct or compel’ students ‘to personally affirm, adopt, or adhere’ to one of eight ‘divisive concepts’ defined in the statute,” the motion states.
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The law, which took effect last October, bars public universities from funding DEI programs and prevents discussions of concepts lawmakers deem divisive. It includes prohibitions against “compelling” students to believe that any race is inherently superior or that people are responsible for historical injustices committed by others of the same race.
UAB students, UA professors sue Alabama over state law banning DEI programs
Ahead of SB 129’s enforcement, universities across the state shuttered or rebranded DEI offices and closed dedicated campus spaces for its Black Student Union and LGBTQ+ resource center.
Plaintiffs argued that the law’s impact disproportionately affects minority students by restricting funding for student organizations such as the University of Alabama NAACP chapter. Attorneys for the board argued that the plaintiffs’ allegations “do not involve any claim that Black students were treated differently from other students.”
“Plaintiffs instead rely on the precarious assumption that coursework related to diversity benefits Black students ‘in particular,’ because of their race,” the motion further states.
Professor Cassandra Simon, one of the plaintiffs, stated in the lawsuit that she fears discussing racial issues because students have previously expressed feelings of guilt or complicity after watching material on the Civil Rights Movement. Lawyers for the state argue that this does not constitute a First Amendment violation, even if Simon has already faced threats of termination for teaching a class on systemic inequality.
The motion stated that “even construing these allegations as true and viewing them in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, Professor Simon’s fear is not objectively reasonable,” saying that simply showing material related to the Civil Rights Movement does not “direct or compel” students to accept the concept or “penalize or discriminate” when students aren’t in agreement.
“Professor Simon does not have standing to challenge any provision of the Act based on such conduct. The same is true of the other Professors’ allegations regarding their subjective fears that teaching ‘about’ topics could violate the Act,” the motion states.
The defense also pushed back against claims that SB 129 is too vague, arguing that the law is clearly defined.
“Though Plaintiffs may not like its terms, the act is readily understood,” the motion states.
Plaintiffs have until April 18 to respond to the state’s motion.
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Alabama Reflector is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Alabama Reflector maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Brian Lyman for questions: info@alabamareflector.com.
The post Alabama officials seek to dismiss lawsuit challenging state DEI ban appeared first on alabamareflector.com
News from the South - Alabama News Feed
WKRG News 5 This Morning Shuck Cancer
SUMMARY: The American Cancer Society’s first “Shuck Cancer” oyster tasting event takes place next week in Fairhope, with proceeds supporting access to care programs in Alabama. Mary Waldrop from the American Cancer Society shared that the event, inspired by a similar one in New Orleans, will feature various Gulf Coast farmers and local chefs cooking oysters. Proceeds will assist patients with lodging and transportation to treatments. The event also includes silent auctions, live music by The Wrong Turns, and bourbon tastings, ensuring activities for everyone. Scheduled for April 3rd at Oakalla Farm, tickets are available via a QR code or online.

Mary Waldrop from the American Cancer Society.
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